A man who killed three people when he drove into the back of another car as he made Snapchat videos while travelling at 225km/h has failed in an attempt to have his nine-year jail sentence reduced.
Keith Lennon (23) killed mother and son Mary (82) and Kevin (58) Faxton, from Bessbrook, Co Armagh, and Bryan Magill (24), from Newry, Co Down, when the three-litre Audi he was driving at 105km/h above the speed limit hit the Faxton’s Peugeot 108 on the northbound carriageway of the N1.
Mr Magill was a passenger in Lennon’s vehicle when the collision occurred at Carrickarnon, Ravensdale, Dundalk, Co Louth, on February 29th, 2020.
Lennon later pleaded guilty to three counts of manslaughter at Dundalk Circuit Criminal Court. Sentencing him in February 2021, Judge Marina Baxter said Lennon had turned his car into a “weapon” on the night in question. She also banned him from driving for 20 years.
Lennon, of Forest Park, Dromintee, Co Armagh, later appealed the severity of his jail sentence. But in an ex tempore judgement delivered on Friday in the Court of Appeal by Mr Justice George Birmingham, sitting with Mr Justice Patrick McCarthy and Ms Justice Isobel Kennedy, Lennon’s attempt to have the time he must serve reduced was rejected.
Mr Justice Birmingham said: “Clearly this was a case where a substantial custodial sentence was inevitable.”
He said Judge Baxter could have even placed the offending in the upper range for sentencing , “given the damage done and degree of recklessness involved”.
‘Reckless’
Noting that prior to the fatal collision “a powerful car was driven for long periods at very high speed”, he added that what had “set the case apart” was the Snapchat videos the accused had been making on his phone while driving at excessive speeds.
“It is difficult to find the language to describe how reckless that was,” Mr Justice Birmingham said.
At a previous hearing, Patrick Gageby SC, for Lennon, told the court that there were “not very many cases in the law books concerning motor manslaughter”.
“There wasn’t any real comparator we could lay before the court and in those circumstances we submit there has been an error [in sentencing],” he said.
“This was not a crime of intention,” he went on, adding that the headline sentence of 14 years identified by Judge Baxter had been “too high, even when you consider the egregious circumstances of the case, which resulted in the deaths of three human beings”.
With relatives of the crash victims sitting in the public benches, Mr Gageby said his client wanted to once again apologise for his actions.
“At sentencing, he directed that an apology be made publicly, and he expresses the same sentiment today,” counsel said.
Shared recordings
Anne-Marie Lawlor SC, for the Director of Public Prosecutions, said the sentence handed down was fair and within the judge’s discretion.
Ms Lawlor explained to the court that not only had the appellant used his phone to video the speedometer of the Audi while he was driving, he had also sent the recordings to others while still behind the wheel and driving at excessive speeds. She said Lennon had made two Snapchat videos in the car before it crashed into the other vehicle and that both clips lasted a total of 14 seconds. This was the “pivotal factor in the case”, counsel said.
“The car was high-powered and he was not insured to drive it,” she continued.
In passing sentence, Ms Lawlor said, Judge Baxter “had carried out a correct and proper assessment of the gravity of the crime and the appellant’s culpability”.